Neymar Named in Brazil's 26-Man Squad for 2026 World Cup Under Carlo Ancelotti

Carlo Ancelotti has named Neymar in Brazil's 26-man squad for the 2026 World Cup, delivering the clearest signal yet that the 33-year-old's international career is not yet finished. The announcement, confirmed by BBC Sport and ESPN on 18 May 2026, marks one of the most consequential selections of Ancelotti's early tenure as Brazil head coach — a decision that carries both sporting weight and considerable political freight inside one of world football's most scrutinised national teams.
Neymar has not featured for the Seleção since October 2024, when a serious knee injury sustained while playing for Al-Hilal effectively ended his 2026 World Cup qualifying campaign before it began. The injury, which required surgery and months of rehabilitation, was the latest chapter in a pattern of physical setbacks that has punctuated the forward's career since his record-breaking move from Barcelona to Paris Saint-Germain in 2017. At the 2022 World Cup in Qatar, Neymar played through significant pain after a late ankle injury sustained in the group stage, a fact that contributed to the team's quarter-final exit against Croatia. By the time the 2026 tournament arrives, he will be 34 — an age at which most forwards at elite level have either transitioned into a reduced role or retired from international football entirely.
Ancelotti, who arrived as Brazil's head coach with a reputation built across three Champions League titles at Real Madrid, AC Milan, and Chelsea, has not publicly detailed the specific criteria that drove his selection of Neymar. What is clear from the reporting across ESPN and BBC Sport is that the squad includes Vinícius Júnior — the Real Madrid forward who has become Brazil's most dynamic attacking threat — alongside Raphinha of Barcelona. The three-pronged attacking shape they could form, if Neymar returns to anything approaching full fitness, gives Ancelotti options that very few national team coaches in world football can match. Whether the balance of those options outweighs the risks of selecting a player who has missed the majority of the qualification cycle is a question that will define how this squad is judged from the moment it is announced.
The Case for Selection
The structural logic of including Neymar is not difficult to articulate. In terms of pure technical ability, he remains one of the most complete forwards in world football — a player capable of breaking defensive lines with a pass, a dribble, or a set-piece delivery that very few humans on earth can replicate under pressure. Brazil's attacking cohort, while talented, is young in critical positions. Vinícius Júnior, Rodrygo, and Raphinha have each demonstrated the ability to decide matches at club level, but the emotional and tactical weight of a World Cup semi-final or final is a different environment entirely. Neymar has navigated that environment before, reaching a semi-final in 2014 and a quarter-final in 2022. Ancelotti has chosen to bet on that experience, and on the possibility that a fully fit Neymar could be the difference-maker that a title-winning side requires.
There is also a commercial and psychological dimension that cannot be entirely dismissed. Brazil's national team generates revenue, sponsorships, and global attention in ways that few sporting institutions can replicate. Neymar is, by some distance, the single most commercially valuable player in the history of Brazilian football. His presence in the squad changes the narrative entering the tournament — from a rebuild under a new coach to a genuine title challenge built around the country's most recognisable star. Whether that narrative is earned or manufactured, Ancelotti appears to have decided that it is worth managing.
The Injury Reality
The counter-argument is substantial and, in many respects, more compelling than the case for selection. Neymar has played 124 matches for Al-Hilal across two seasons since leaving PSG in 2023, but those appearances have been punctuated by the long rehabilitation period that followed his October 2024 injury and a series of smaller issues that have limited his availability throughout his time in Saudi Arabia. At 33, with a body that has absorbed more physical contact than most elite athletes ever face, the question is not whether Neymar can train — it is whether he can perform across the compressed, high-intensity schedule that a World Cup demands.
Brazil's medical staff will be acutely aware that the forward's fitness levels heading into the tournament remain uncertain. The sources reviewed for this article do not contain detail on his current medical status or whether Ancelotti's selection was contingent on a clean fitness report. What is observable is that Ancelotti has been in post long enough to make an informed judgment, and has chosen to make that judgment public. The decision carries risk — for Neymar, for the squad's tactical coherence if he cannot start, and for Ancelotti's own credibility as a selector if the player fails to deliver.
What Comes Next
The squad will travel to North America in June with genuine aspirations. Brazil has not won the World Cup since 2002, a drought that has generated its own mythology inside the country — arguments about the quality of coaching, the role of the Brazilian Football Confederation, and whether the modern game has simply moved beyond the style that once made the Seleção dominant. Ancelotti's arrival was itself a response to those arguments: a coach with the credibility and tactical sophistication to compete with the best national team managers in the world.
Whether Neymar is a part of that response or a reminder of its limitations will be decided on the pitch. The first match in the tournament will provide the clearest answer to a question that the sources do not fully resolve: at what level, if any, can the player who once redefined what attacking football could look like operate at this stage of his career?
This desk notes that the broader media framing around Neymar's selection has centred on his personal narrative — the comeback story, the redemption arc — in ways that tend to obscure the tactical specifics of what he offers Ancelotti's squad. Monexus has prioritised the selection logic and the competitive context over the biographical angle.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/tasnimnews_en/37432